57 pages • 1 hour read
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Content Warning: This section of the guide includes discussion of death, physical abuse, emotional abuse, animal death, addiction, and substance use.
The oakleaf—both as a symbol of the Rangers and of Horace’s faux coat of arms—is a symbol exploring honor and loyalty and representing The Tension Between Personal Loyalty and Loyalty to Country. In the previous novels, the oakleaf necklace (bronze for apprentices, silver for Rangers, gold for retired Rangers) was the symbol of the Ranger Corps in general, but Halt’s loss of it due to his exile shows his disconnection from the ideals of the Corps as a whole. Halt’s reluctant loss of his oakleaf shows his willingness to betray his country for Will’s sake since both characters have previously valued their title as Rangers above anything else. Horace’s adoption of the false “Order of the Oakleaf,” however, establishes a new bond, demonstrating the value and loyalty of Halt and Horace’s new friendship. Horace is not even supposed to have a coat of arms as an apprentice knight, but his adoption of the title shows that he, too, is more loyal to Halt and Will, by extension, than to the rules and regulations of Araluen and chivalry.
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